In the book of Bamidbar – Numbers, in English – we find a fascinating passage that deals precisely with this: the idea of sacred space, separation, and the surprising presence of the Divine even amidst impurity.
The text begins with the seemingly simple instruction: "Outside of the camp shall you send them." (Numbers 5:2). But hold on, what’s the intent here? The Sifrei Bamidbar, a collection of legal interpretations on the Book of Numbers, asks a crucial question. Could it be that the point is simply to keep certain individuals – those deemed ritually impure – away from the holiest objects, like the Ark of the Covenant? Maybe they could still have a designated area within the camp?
That’s where the next part of the verse comes in, clarifying: "…and they shall not make unclean their camps." This repetition of the word "camp" – not once, not twice, but three times! – hints at something deeper. The Rabbis of old, always astute readers, noticed this and from it, they deduced a crucial concept: There weren't just one, but three concentric "camps" of holiness (Sifrei Bamidbar 3).
Imagine Jerusalem in ancient times. The outermost circle, from the city's entrance to the Temple Mount, was considered the "Israelite camp." Moving inward, from the entrance of the Temple Mount to the azarah, the Temple courtyard, was the "Levite camp." And finally, the innermost sanctum, from the entrance of the azarah inwards – that was considered the camp of the